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Green, Gene and Evergreen Revolutions: Interesting wordplay

By Suman Sahai

By successfully morphing the popular Green Revolution with the Gene Revolution, proponents of agricultural biotechnology appear to indicate that the latter will bring in all the benefits of the former, and in perpetuity. But there are glaring differences between the two so-called 'revolutions' More...

Herbicide-tolerant plants: Not in India, please!

By Suman Sahai

Herbicide-tolerant crops contain a gene that makes them resistant to the herbicide that is sprayed to kill herbs and weeds. The herbicide-tolerance trait is essentially labour-saving and will have economic implications were it to be introduced in labour-surplus developing countries like India More...

Bt cotton: What's the fuss about?

By Suman Sahai

Bt cotton is unlikely to work for more than a few years in India because it is fundamentally at odds with the agricultural and climatic conditions here More...

How a genetically-engineered plant is made

By Suman Sahai

In the first of a fortnightly series that demystifies genetic engineering and its impact on the environment and health, Suman Sahai explains the cut-and-paste processes that go into making a transgenic plant More...

Retail blitzkrieg

By Devinder Sharma

A US study has established increasing poverty in states where Wal-Mart has expanded operations. But in India, not a single independent study has examined the impact of organised retail on 12 million small shopkeepers, 40 million hawkers and 200 million small farmers More...

Are supply-side solutions to water access sufficient?

By Darryl D'Monte

While overall access to water supply infrastructure in cities is increasing, coverage remains uneven. But are dams and so-called "flexible water allocations", as advocated by the World Bank, the answer? More...

SEZs: A catalogue of questions

By Aseem Shrivastava

Can a few "treasure islands" take shelter from the nation's Constitution in the guise of economic growth? More...

East India Company: Mother of the modern-day corporation

By Nick Robins

The East India Company outstripped Wal-Mart in market power, Enron in corruption, and Union Carbide in human devastation. The success of two Armenian merchants in bringing the Company to book in 1769 for corporate malpractice should inspire us to hold corporations to account More...

The limits of judicial activism

By Rakesh Shukla

Today, everything from river pollution to the selection of the cricket team has become the purview of judicial activism. Is it time to put the genie back in the bottle and confine the courts' public interest jurisdiction to its original purpose of ensuring justice to the poor and exploited? More...

Are GMOs spiralling out of control?

By Darryl D'Monte

To argue that genetically-modified crops will solve the problem of hunger thanks to their higher productivity, is like saying that Bill Gates developed Microsoft software to solve the world's illiteracy problem. And what if the technology runs amuck? More...

Recipes for making India 'hunger-free'

By Ashok Gopal

A roadmap prepared by the National Commission on Farmers, chaired by M S Swaminathan, insists that only a Rs 39,500-crore subsidy for a universal public distribution system can solve the food security problem. Is this practicable? More...

India's new maharajas

By Devinder Sharma

SEZs, with their special status and privileges, will operate much like the princely states of yore More...

 

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